ABSTRACT

First published in 1963, this work puts into clear and rhythmical English one hundred stories and apologues of the Masnavi of Rumi.

Composed over a period of many years during the thirteenth century, as a manual of instruction and initiation into spiritual life, the Masnavi has long been acclaimed the greatest mystical epic of Islam. The tales were designed to illustrate in human terms the often complex doctrine, and this they do with a wealth of beauty, honour and pathos, as appealing to the modern reader as to the medieval audience to which they were originally addressed. The volume, like its predecessor Tales of the Masnavi, is included in the UNESCO list of representative great works of world literature.

This work will be of interest to those studying Islam and Middle Eastern literature.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 102|1 pages

The preacher who prayed for sinners

chapter 105|1 pages

Othman in the pulpit

chapter 106|4 pages

Solomon and the Queen of Sheba

chapter 107|2 pages

The clay-eater and the druggist

chapter 108|2 pages

The dervish’s dream

chapter 109|2 pages

The conversion of Ibrahim ibn Adham

chapter 110|1 pages

The man who dropped walnuts into a stream

chapter 111|6 pages

The infant Muhammad lost and found

chapter 112|1 pages

The Sufi in the orchard

chapter 114|1 pages

The scholar and the thief

chapter 115|2 pages

The false panegyrist

chapter 116|2 pages

The Prophet and the young man of Hudhail

chapter 117|2 pages

Bayazid and his disciples

chapter 118|2 pages

The three fishes

chapter 119|1 pages

The fowler and the bird

chapter 120|9 pages

Pharaoh and Moses

chapter 121|1 pages

Ali and the child, on congeneity

chapter 122|2 pages

Muhammad and the Bedouin chiefs

chapter 123|2 pages

The end of the story of Moses and Pharaoh

chapter 125|2 pages

Moses questions God’s purpose

chapter 126|4 pages

The prince and the Witch of Kabul

chapter 127|2 pages

The drought and the laughing ascetic

chapter 128|2 pages

The mule and the camel

chapter 129|3 pages

The Egyptian and the Israelite

chapter 130|1 pages

The woman and the pear-tree

chapter 131|2 pages

The descent and the ascent of Man

chapter 132|1 pages

Alexander the Great and Mount Qaf

chapter 133|1 pages

The pen and the ants

chapter 134|2 pages

The four birds: the duck

chapter 135|4 pages

The greedy unbeliever

chapter 136|2 pages

The four birds: the peacock

chapter 137|1 pages

The Bedouin and his dog

chapter 138|2 pages

The sage and the peacock

chapter 139|1 pages

The four birds: the crow

chapter 140|2 pages

The gazelle and the asses

chapter 141|1 pages

The four birds: the cock

chapter 142|2 pages

The man who claimed to be a prophet

chapter 143|1 pages

The faithful lover

chapter 144|1 pages

The mystic and the puppies

chapter 145|5 pages

The creation of Adam

chapter 146|1 pages

The simpleton and his answer

chapter 147|6 pages

King Mahmud and Ayaz

chapter 148|4 pages

Nasuh’s repentance

chapter 149|2 pages

The ass and the Arab horses

chapter 150|6 pages

The fox and the ass

chapter 151|2 pages

The ascetic who trusted in God

chapter 152|1 pages

The man who feared to be taken for an ass

chapter 153|4 pages

Shaikh Sar-razi of Ghazna

chapter 154|1 pages

The parable of the anxious cow

chapter 155|1 pages

The monk who searched for a man

chapter 156|1 pages

The thief in the orchard

chapter 157|1 pages

The bold dervish of Herat

chapter 158|1 pages

Majnun and Laila’s beauty

chapter 159|2 pages

The muezzin with the evil voice

chapter 160|1 pages

The greedy wife and the cat

chapter 161|4 pages

The merry prince and the Christian ascetic

chapter 162|1 pages

Dalqak and the King of Tirmidh

chapter 163|2 pages

The wife and the guest

chapter 164|2 pages

The girl who married beneath her

chapter 165|2 pages

The Sufi who was a coward

chapter 166|2 pages

The story of 'Iyadi

chapter 167|5 pages

The caliph and the general

chapter 168|1 pages

The bird on the city-wall

chapter 169|5 pages

The bird and the fowler

chapter 170|1 pages

The watchman who fell asleep

chapter 171|2 pages

The Turk and the minstrel

chapter 172|2 pages

The poet and the Shi'ites of Aleppo

chapter 173|2 pages

The midnight drummer

chapter 174|2 pages

The devotion of Bilal

chapter 176|1 pages

The amir and the refractory horse

chapter 177|2 pages

Muhammad visits Hilal

chapter 178|1 pages

The disappointed beggar

chapter 179|2 pages

The hag who hankered for a husband

chapter 180|1 pages

Sultan Mahmud and the Indian boy

chapter 181|3 pages

The sick man, the Sufi and the Cadi

chapter 182|3 pages

The Turk and the tailor

chapter 183|1 pages

The Sufi and the priest

chapter 184|1 pages

The poor man and his nagging wife

chapter 185|3 pages

The answer to the pauper’s prayer

chapter 186|3 pages

Shaikh Abu ’l-Husain and his wife

chapter 187|1 pages

The camel, the ox and the ram

chapter 188|3 pages

The Jew, the Christian and the Muslim

chapter 189|2 pages

How Dalqak rode to town in haste

chapter 190|3 pages

The mouse and the frog

chapter 191|2 pages

King Mahmud and the thieves

chapter 192|1 pages

'Abd al-Ghauth and the Peris

chapter 193|1 pages

Ja'far attacks a fortress single-handed

chapter 195|2 pages

The ruler of Bukhara and the jurist beggar

chapter 196|2 pages

The drunken king and the reluctant jurist

chapter 197|3 pages

The man who sought for treasure

chapter 198|4 pages

Goha, his wife and the cadi

chapter 199|2 pages

God speaks with the Angel of Death

chapter 200|1 pages

The child and the bogy